character written as numeric HTML entity, in the
format:"how it looks literally" -->
"what your browser does with it"

4th:

character written as symbolic HTML entity, in the
format:"how it looks literally" -->
"what your browser does with it"

So for example, if you see something like "&divide; -->
&divide;" in the 4th column, this means your browser
doesn't know about the entity name "divide" and just puts it
literally.

This table grew out of an overview of the "ISO
Latin-1 Character Set" overview related to the Hyper-G Text Format
(HTF).
The entity names &brkbar; and &Dstrok;
seem to be unique to HTF.
The entity name &hibar; has been supported by X Mosaic
but seems to be replaced with &macr;.
The entity names &uml; and &die; should
be equivalent.

Please note that there is nothing wrong with using
characters of ISO Latin-1 above 127: the normal transmission protocol
for the WWW,
HTTP/1.0,
uses the 8bit ISO latin-1 as default encoding.
(Thanks to Roman
Czyborra for pointing this out!)